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First Line Band Goin' Home
Bob Stewart

CD Price: $16.00

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Track Listing
1. Subi la Nas Alturas
2. Art Deco
3. Bell and Ponce
4. Tunk
5. Sugar Finger
6. Sweet Georgia Brown Sweet:
- Sweet Georgia Brown
- Windmill
- Donna
7. Priestess

Detailed Description / Musicians
Musicians:
Bob Stewart - Tuba
James Zoller - Trumpet
Steve Turre - Trombone
Jerome Harris - Guitar
Buddy Williams - Drums
Earl Gardner - Trumpet
John Clark - Horn
Frank Colon - Percussion
Ed Blackwell - Drums


Description:
The second recording by tuba player Bob Stewart's First Line Band is even better than the first. In 1988, Stewart's group also included trumpeter James Zoller, trombonist Steve Turre, guitarist Jerome Harris and either Buddy Williams or Ed Blackwell on drums; trumpeter Earl Gardner and John Clark on French horn have guest spots on this CD. The music ranges from the straightforward swing of Don Cherry's "Art Deco" and a good-humored "Sweet Georgia Brown" to a 12½-minute exploration of Billy Harper's "Priestess" and originals by Stewart, Olu Dara and Kelvyn Bell. Stimulating and often-surprising music that is generally more accessible than one might expect.

--Scott Yanow
All Music Guide


  Available Items by Bob Stewart About Bob Stewart 

Website: http://www.bobstewartuba.com

Bob Stewart is a freelance concert artist, educator, and studio musician. Mr. Stewart has received his Bachelor of Music Education degree from the Philadelphia College of the Performing Arts and his Masters in Education at Lehman College Graduate School. He also teaches privately and has been involved with public education for over twenty years. He is now teaching at the Juilliard School and is a "Distinguished Lecturer" at Lehman College.

Bob has toured and recorded with such artists as Charles Mingus, Gil Evans, Carla Bley, David Murray, Taj Mahal, Dizzy Gillespie, McCoy Tyner, Arthur Blythe, Freddie Hubbard, Don Cherry, Nicholas Payton, Wynton Marsalis, Charlie Haden and many others both in the United States, Europe and the Far East. "The Tuba, as you know, was phased out of most ensembles around 1923 with the introduction of the "walking" upright bass. Since then it has only been in the last 20 years that composers and arrangers have begun hearing the instrument. As a result, there are more instances in which the Tuba appears in ensemble work."

Bob Stewart is bridging the gap between 1923 and the present by bringing the Tuba back into the modern ensemble as the bass in the rhythm section and as a horn available for melodic lines and soloing.

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